Pop Art and the Origins of Post-Modernism
Pop Art and the Origins of Post-Modernism examines the critical reception of Pop Art in America during the 1960s. Comparing the ideas of a group of New York-based critics, including Leo Steinberg, Susan Sontag, and Max Kozloff, among others, Sylvia Harrison demonstrates how their ideas - broadly categorized as either sociological or philosophical - bear a striking similarity to the body of thought and opinion which is now associated with deconstructive post-modernism. Perceived through these disciplinary lenses, Pop Art arises as not only a reflection of the dominance of mass communications and capitalist consumerism in post-war American society, but also a subversive commentary on worldviews and the factors necessary for their formation.
- Examines the origins of postmodernism in visual art and visual art criticism
- Compares various perspectives on pop art and analyzes the perspectives themselves
- Focuses on the writings of key critics in the New York art world during the sixties
Product details
January 2005Adobe eBook Reader
9780511031496
0 pages
0kg
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- 1. Postmodernist assumptions
- 2. Lawrence Alloway: pop srt and the 'pop art-fine art continuum'
- 3. Harold Rosenberg and the 'de-definition' of both art and self
- 4. Leo Steinberg: pop, 'Post-Modernist' painting and the flatbed picture plane
- 5. Barbara Rose: pop, pragmatism and 'prophetic pragmatism'
- 6. Max Kozloff: a phenomenological solution to 'Warholism' and its disenfranchisement of the critic's interpretive and evaluative roles
- 7. Susan Sontag: the aesthetics of silence and the new sensibility
- Conclusion.